Prime Day also made its debut in China, a country where the company has long struggled to compete with big local firms like Alibaba(BABA, Tech30) and JD.com(JD).

But CEO Jeff Bezos is clearly focused on China’s southern neighbor — he has funneled massive amounts of money into India in recent years, earmarking $5 billion since 2014 to grow the company’s business in the country.

Amazon introduced its Prime subscription service to Indian users for the first time last July, before also rolling out its Netflix(NFLX, Tech30) rival — Amazon Prime Video — in December.

Sahi told CNNMoney that the number of Prime subscriptions in India has doubled since the start of 2017.

A low price point probably helps. At an “introductory” price of 499 rupees ($8) per year, Indian Amazon Prime users pay less than a tenth of the $99 annual fee the service costs in the U.S.

“We have been humbled by the tremendous response that Prime has received since its launch in India less than a year ago,” Sahi said. “We are super excited to bring Prime Day [here] for the first time.”

The potential boost from its big day of deals could help Amazon further close the gap with its Indian rival Flipkart. The Bangalore-based online marketplace has outpaced its American rival in India, and is looking to increase its dominance by buying other big local players.

Amazon is steadily using its deep pockets and global tech prowess to increase its foothold in the country, analysts say. The company is reportedly planning to start selling its smart speaker Echo — with the company’s AI-enabled assistant Alexa built in — in India this year.

“Amazon has been doing a number of things in India to solidify its market position including the launch of Prime, Echo and now the Prime Day,” said Sandy Shen, research director at Gartner.

“Flipkart is leading from the market-share perspective but Amazon is leading in technology and innovation.”